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Viewing 5 replies - 736 through 750 (of 1,217 total)
  • Mick Avoidant
    Participant

    Thanks for your question response.

    SOLVED! This is working now!

    When I looked at the Mixer with a “wrongly imported” preset, there were knobs at the bottom, but no mixer/sliders section at all!

    Here’s what I think I did wrong: To the best of my memory, when I originally upgraded to EZD3 long ago, I manually dragged my EZD2 presets into the directory where EZD3 presets are stored. I believe this was the wrong way to import EZD2 presets, as EZD3 will then show the preset as an EZD3 preset (even though it isn’t) …I think that is what happened. It has been like this for a while, and I have moved locations to an external drive as well, so there might be some confusion now.

    However, I just saved preset, as a test, in EZD2. Then, in EZD3, I now see where to import it in in a section of the menu labeled “EZ Drummer 2” (see attached screenshot). My “drag and drop import process” was at fault, is my current theory of what I was doing wrong. THANKS.

    Reply To: Importing EZD2 customized drum kit presets into EZD3 version: 3.0.6
    Operating system: macOS Ventura (13)

    You’re all set

    Mick Avoidant
    Participant

    Can you show us a screenshot? Check the faders in the Mixer tab.

    Mick Avoidant
    Participant
    Hello guys! I just got ezdrummer3, the bandmate feature will...

    Hello guys! I just got ezdrummer3, the bandmate feature will make things so much easier! Now, I read it’s best to use “clean” guitar tones for best results – however I was wondering – does the feature still work well enough w/ distorted guitar? In my case, I have some very rough guitar demos recorded using distortion, and I honestly don’t feel like re-recording them with a clean tone – unless the bandmate results would be SIGNIFICANTLY better. Do you guys think it’ll do a fine enough job finding grooves for my riffs as is, or should I really re-record my distorted riffs in a clean tone?

    Reply To: BANDMATE feature w/ distorted guitar? version: 3.0.6

    Hello guys! I just got ezdrummer3, the bandmate feature will make things so much easier! Now, I read it’s best to use “clean” guitar tones for best results – however I was wondering – does the feature still work well enough w/ distorted guitar? In my case, I have some very rough guitar demos recorded using distortion, and I honestly don’t feel like re-recording them with a clean tone – unless the bandmate results would be SIGNIFICANTLY better. Do you guys think it’ll do a fine enough job finding grooves for my riffs as is, or should I really re-record my distorted riffs in a clean tone?

    Reply To: BANDMATE feature w/ distorted guitar? version: 3.0.6

    Give it a go with the distorted guitar. Bandmate is a great tool.

    Mick Avoidant
    Participant

    ‘Open’ followed by a number is how much of a gap is between the top and bottom hats. The higher the number, the more ‘open’ the gap is. The sound will be different and the higher the number, the louder the hit.

    Mick Avoidant
    Participant

    Maybe you could ask Toontrack for an EXP inspired by LL. https://www.toontrack.com/forums/forum/customer-service/requests-and-feedback/

Viewing 5 replies - 736 through 750 (of 1,217 total)

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